Sermon XIV. The sin and judgment of spiritual barrenness.

“But the miry places thereof, and the marshes thereof
shall not be healed; they shall be given to salt.” — Ezek. xlvii. 11.

This prophecy
contains a vision of the glorious, holy, gospel state of the church, under
the representation of a most glorious temple, incomparably excelling that
built of old by Solomon; an exposition whereof we have, 2 Cor. iii. 6–8, etc.

The beginning of this chapter sets out the way and means of
the calling and gathering of gospel churches, whose worship is to be so
glorious; and this is under a vision of “waters issuing out of the
sanctuary,” to heal and quicken all places to which they come.

By the waters here mentioned is the preaching of the gospel
intended. And we may observe of them, first, Their rise, which was from
the sanctuary; secondly, Their progress, — they increased until
they became a river that none could pass over; thirdly, Their
effects or efficacy, — they healed all waters where they came, and
quickened, or caused to live, the fishes that were in them.

180I must not long insist on these
particulars.

First. The house, or temple, from whence these waters
issue, may be taken two ways:—

1. Mystically, to denote only the presence of God. God
dwelt in his temple; thence come these waters — from his presence. He
sends out the word of the gospel for the conversion and healing of the
nations, Ps. cx. 2. Or, —

2. Figuratively; and that either for the place where the
temple of old stood (that is, Jerusalem), as the preaching of the gospel
was to go forth from Jerusalem, and the sound of it from thence to proceed
unto all the world, as Isa. xli. 27, lii.
7; Acts i. 4,
8; or for the church of Christ and his apostles, the first
glorious, spiritual temple unto God, whence these waters issued.

Secondly. Their progress; which is described by degrees,
it being at first small, — few men preaching it, and to a few, — but
afterward increasing until it filled the whole earth.

Thirdly. The effects mentioned or ascribed unto these
waters are two, — quickening and healing; which I shall not in general
speak farther unto, because I shall do it in the opening of my text.

In the words of the text you have the state and condition
of those places whither the waters of the sanctuary do come, and the
effects before ascribed unto them are not produced; for so the words are to
be read, — they “shall not be healed.”

We have here a description of some lands or places
whereunto the holy waters do come. First, They are “miry and marshy
places;” secondly, The event of the waters coming to them, — they are “not
healed;” thirdly, The consequent of that event, — they are “given unto
salt.”

I shall in a few words lay open the allegory, or parable,
unto you.

First. By the waters of the sanctuary, I told you, is
meant the preaching of the gospel, — that quickening and healing word which
the Lord sends out to gather his church unto himself all the world over, to
call his saints to that glorious, gospel, spiritual worship, which is here
described in this vision of a temple.

Secondly. The “miry and marshy places” where these waters
come, are such where persons cleave inseparably and incurably to their
lusts and sins, so that they are not healed by the word. The healing word
of the gospel comes, but they receive it not; the water flows over them,
they drink it not in, — are not quickened nor healed by it.

The figurative sense of the passage thus explained will
afford us the following observations:—

Observation I. God is pleased oftentimes to send the
waters of the 181sanctuary to “miry and marshy places,” that
“shall never be healed” by them, nor made fruitful; — or, God, in his
infinite wisdom, is pleased to send the preaching of the word unto some
places wherein it shall not put forth its quickening and sanctifying power
and virtue upon the souls of them that hear it.

II. All places in the world are barren, unsound, and
unhealthy, before the coming of the waters of the sanctuary upon them; —
or, the souls of all men are spiritually dead and full of woeful
distempers, until they are quickened and healed by the dispensation of the
gospel. The word must come and heal them.

III. The waters of the sanctuary are healing waters; — or,
the word of the gospel is in its own nature a quickening, healing,
sanctifying, saving word, to them who receive it.

IV. Where the waters of the sanctuary come, and the land is
not healed, that land is given up of the Lord to salt or barrenness for
ever; — or, where the word of the gospel is, by the infinitely wise
disposal of God, preached unto a place or persons, and they receive it not
so as to have their sinful distempers healed by it, they are usually, after
a season, given up, by the righteous judgment of God, unto barrenness and
everlasting ruin.

It is this last proposition, as that which is the direct
design and scope of the place, that I intend to insist principally upon.
But yet I shall speak somewhat to the former.

I. God is pleased oftentimes, in his infinite wisdom, to
send the preaching of the word unto some places wherein it shall not put
forth its quickening and sanctifying power and virtue upon the souls of
them that hear it.

The whole Scripture, and whole story of the providence of
God in sending the gospel abroad in the world, bears witness to this truth.
It was his way from the foundation of the world, and continueth to this
very day. Hence was that complaint of the prophet, Isa. liii.
1, “Who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the
Loud revealed?” — the gospel is preached to them that believe not the
report thereof; — and chap. xlix.
4, “Then I said, I have laboured in vain, I have spent my
strength for nought.” But we need no greater instance nor any other than
that of our Saviour, who spent the greatest part of his ministry in
preaching to them who were never healed, — never converted nor sanctified
by his word. That account he gives of his work, Matt. xi. 21–24, “Woe unto thee,
Chorazin! woe unto thee, Bethsaida!” etc.

Now, though there be no searching into the depths of the
counsels of God, yet there appear many reasons wherein his wisdom in this
dispensation doth shine forth; as, —

1. He doth it principally because, in those places where
the word 182is rejected by the generality of the people, yet
there may be some secret, poor souls belonging to the election of grace,
whom God will have gathered and called home to himself. So for their
sakes, though in the world they are taken no notice of, the word shall be
preached unto multitudes. Amos ix.
9, “I will sift the house of Israel among all nations, like as
corn is sifted in a sieve, yet shall not the least grain fall upon the
earth.” The grains of Israel must be preserved through all the nations of
the earth, that not one grain may be lost. Thus Paul preaches the gospel
at Philippi, Acts xvi. 12, 13. And what
entertainment meets it withal? He and his companion are taken and beaten,
and cast into prison sore hurt and wounded; verses 22, 23. Why, then, was it
that the gospel must be preached there? Why, there was a stranger come to
that town, a poor woman, one Lydia, that dwelt at Thyatira, and she was to
be converted, and brought home to God, verse
14. So at Athens, chap. xvii.
34. And the apostle affirms that he “endured all things for the
elect’s sakes,” 2 Tim. ii.
10. Here and there a poor despised person is designed to be
called.

2. God doth it for a testimony against them that receive it
not, and to leave them inexcusable at the last day. Mark vi. 11, “Whosoever shall not
receive you, nor hear you, when ye depart thence, shake off the dust under
your feet for a testimony against them.” The word is to be preached, and
witness, as it were, is to be taken upon it that it was preached, that men
may be left without excuse at the last day. As our Saviour pleads
concerning his own preaching to the Pharisees, John xv.
22, “If I had not come and spoken unto them, they had not had
sin; but now they have no cloak for their sin.” God will cause men to be
without excuse, by that tender of mercy which is made unto them in the
gospel. It shall be for a testimony against them at the last day.

Use. Let not men boast themselves in the outward
enjoyment of the word, nor rest themselves in it. It were well, indeed, if
all were believers to whom the word is preached, — if all lands were healed
where the waters of the sanctuary come; but the Holy Ghost tells us they
are not so, Heb. iv. 2, “The word preached did not
profit them.” Capernaum was “exalted unto heaven,” in the use of means;
but “brought down to hell” for the neglect of them. Let men look to
themselves; God hath various ends in sending the gospel. The Lord knows
what will be the end of England’s enjoying the gospel so long as it hath
done. Sad symptoms appear of a tremendous issue. But I shall speak of
this afterward.

II. The souls of all men are spiritually dead, and full of
woeful distempers, until they are quickened and healed by the dispensation
of the gospel.

183The waters of the sanctuary must come, to
quicken them and heal them. They are distempered, therefore, and woefully
disordered, before the coming of these waters. So the apostle informs us,
Tit. iii. 5, “For we ourselves also
were sometimes foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving divers lusts and
pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful, and hating one another. But
after that the kindness and love of God our Saviour toward man appeared,
not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his
mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy
Ghost.” Before the gospel grace comes to heal and cleanse them, this is
the state and condition of men; as it is more largely described by the
apostle, Rom. i. 18 to the end.

I shall not stay to mention all the particular distempers
that rage in some, and that rule and reign in all before the coming of the
gospel; as darkness, blindness, ignorance, worldly-mindedness, sensuality,
hatred of God, envy, and malice, which are fixed in the souls of men by
presumption and self-righteousness. There is nothing in them of spiritual
life or holiness, of purity or zeal, — nothing that is acceptable or
pleasing unto God. But to set forth this to the utmost, were to describe
the whole natural condition of men, — which is not my present work; and
therefore I shall not farther insist on it.

III. The word of the gospel is in its own nature a
quickening, healing, sanctifying, saving word, to them who receive it.

They [the waters of the sanctuary] bring Christ along with
them, the great physician of souls, who alone is able to cure a sin-sick
soul. They bring mercy with them to pardon sinners, that “the inhabitants
of the land may no more say they are sick, having their sins forgiven
them,” Isa. xxxiii. 24. They bring grace
with them to cure all the distempers of lusts, Isa.
xi. 5–7; Tit.
ii. 11, 12.

These things I have only touched upon, and proceed now to
the fourth observation, on which I chiefly proposed to insist.

IV. Where the waters of the sanctuary come, and the land is
not healed, that land is given up of the Lord to salt and barrenness for
ever; — or, where the word of the gospel is preached unto a place, or
persons, and they receive it not so as to have their sinful distempers
healed by it, they are given up by the righteous judgment of God unto
barrenness and everlasting ruin.

To clear this proposition I shall show, — 1. What I mean by
the coming of the waters of the sanctuary, or the preaching of the gospel,
to a place or persons; 2. What by healing their sinful distempers; 3. What
by being given up to barrenness and ruin.

1. By the coming of the healing waters of the sanctuary, I
intend not the occasional preaching of a sermon, although this be
sufficient to justify God in the rejection of any person or people. In the
first 184preaching of the gospel, the refusal of one sermon lost
many their souls unto all eternity. When the Lord Jesus sent out his
disciples to preach the tidings of everlasting peace, he commanded them to
pass through the towns, cities, and villages, and to offer them peace and
mercy in the word of truth; which if they received not, they were to shake
off the dust of their feet against them, Matt. x. 12–15; Luke x. 8–12. But O the
unspeakable patience of Christ to many in the world, where the word is
continued ofttimes for a very long season, and the salvation tendered
therein despised! But this is that which I intend as the rule of the
dispensation mentioned, — namely, when God by his providence doth cause the
word to be preached for some continuance, and to the revelation of his
whole counsel; as Paul affirmed himself to have done at Ephesus, Acts xx. 27, where he had abode
above a year.

Nor do I mean any waters, but the waters of the sanctuary;
not any preaching, but the preaching of the gospel of Jesus Christ: which
Paul affirms to be his work, Eph. iii.
8. All waters are not the waters of the sanctuary; all
preaching is not the preaching of the sanctuary. There is preaching in the
world wherein God and the souls of men are no more concerned than in an
oration of an ancient heathen. Many undertake to be preachers who never
“stood in the counsel of God,” as he complains, Jer.
xxiii. 22, who never received of the Spirit of Christ, nor knew
his mind, — blind leaders of the blind. The children of Zion are promised,
under the gospel, that “they shall be all taught of God.” And we have men
undertaking to be teachers of them, who never learned any thing of Christ;
— a wicked generation of soul-murderers, for which cursed work they every
day invent new engines, — whom the Lord’s soul abhors. See their condition
and portion, Ezek.
xxxiv. 3, 4, etc. I mean, therefore, a dispensation of the word
according to the mind of Christ, — the due unfolding of the mystery of the
gospel. This is the coming I intend.

2. What is meant by their sinful distempers not being
healed? Look what the waters of the sanctuary come to do: if that be not
effected, they are not healed.

Now, there are two effects here ascribed unto the waters of
the sanctuary:— (1.) They quicken and give new life, verse 9. A natural life they had
before, but these give them another life. (2.) Healing, as the waters of
Jericho by Elisha, 2 Kings ii.
21. Where these effects are not produced, that is the condition
described, that is the state of these” miry and marshy places,” — they are
not healed:—

(1.) Men are not quickened; they receive not a new
spiritual life; they are not so brought to the knowledge of God. It is not
enough that men have their affections wrought upon, or their lives in some
measure reformed; — unless they are quickened, unless they receive a 185new spiritual life by the word, they are as the unhealed places,
over which the curse here mentioned hangs.

(2.) The healing of these quickened souls consists in the
curing and mortifying of their sinful distempers. This follows the other.
Where there is life, there will be healing. Let not men pretend that they
live spiritually, if their lusts be not healed. If men are proud, worldly,
sensual, they are dead also; there is no effect of the waters of the
sanctuary upon them. If men are not made holy, humble, believing, zealous,
if they receive not the spirit of prayer and faith, they are not
healed.

This is the condition of the “miry and marshy places” here
mentioned:— God, in his infinite wisdom and goodness, causeth the gospel to
be dispensed among a people, to be preached, where they do, or may, and
ought to attend unto it; but they are not converted by the word, not
sanctified by it, but continue in their old state and condition. He that
was filthy is filthy still; he that was unrighteous is so still; — he that
was in the mire of the world and sin is so still.

3. What is the lot and portion of such persons? Why, “they
shall be given to salt;” that is, as I have showed, to barrenness,
fruitlessness, unprofitableness, and eternal ruin.

This is the meaning of the proposition; and it is a
dreadful word, which yet is true, and will prove so at the last day. Woe
to the “miry and marshy places” of the world! woe to the persons and places
to whom [and to which] the waters of the sanctuary have come and they are
not healed! I shall not need to insist much on the proof of the
proposition, the Scripture so abounds with testimonies of it. But I shall
do these three things:— 1. Name some places that plainly speak the same
truth; 2. Show the degrees in which God proceeds usually in this great
work, in giving up unprofitable hearers to ruin; and, 3. Give the grounds
of it:—

1. For other Scriptures which assert the same truth, take
Prov. i. 25–31, “But ye have set at
nought all my counsel, and would none of my reproof: I also will laugh at
your calamity; I will mock when your fear cometh; when your fear cometh as
desolation, and your destruction cometh as a whirlwind; when distress and
anguish cometh upon you. Then shall they call upon me, but I will not
answer; they shall seek me early, but they shall not find me: for that they
hated knowledge, and did not choose the fear of the Lord: they would none of my counsel:
they despised all my reproof. Therefore shall they eat of the fruit of
their own way, and be filled with their own devices;” — Prov. xxix. 1, “He that, being often
reproved, hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without
remedy;” — Luke xiii. 6, “He spake also this
parable; A certain man had a fig-tree 186planted in his vineyard;
and he came and sought fruit thereon, and found none,” etc. So Heb. x. 28–30; 2 Cor. ii. 15, 16.

2. For the degrees of rejection, see Ezek.
x. 18, xi. 23; Heb. vi. 8,
“But that which beareth thorns and briers is rejected, and is nigh unto
cursing; whose end is to be burned.” They are first rejected, then cursed,
and lastly burned. But, —

3. That which I shall principally insist upon, is to show
the ways whereby God doth usually proceed in giving up such persons to
barrenness, and so to everlasting ruin:—

(1.) He casts them out of his care; — he will be at no more
charge nor cost with them, nor about them. So, Heb. vi.
8, the land is ἀδόκιμος, —
“rejected;” the owner will take no more care or pains about such an
unprofitable piece of land; he will till it no more, dress it no more, but
leave it to its own barrenness. God is the great husbandman, John xv. 1. When a miry place is not
healed, he will cast it out of his husbandry. So Ezek.
xxiv. 13, They have had their time and season, and “are not
purged;” therefore “they shall be purged no more.” Jer. vi. 29, 30, “The bellows are
burned, the lead is consumed of the fire; the founder melteth in vain: for
the wicked are not plucked away. Reprobate silver shall men call them,
because the Lord hath rejected them.” This the Lord Christ declares to be
his way of proceeding with them, Zech.
xi. 8, 9, “My soul loathed them, and their soul also abhorred
me. Then said I, I will not feed you: that that dieth, let it die; and
that that is to be cut off, let it be cut off; and let the rest eat every
one the flesh of another.” A sad parting, the Lord knows! They give up
Christ, — he gives up them; and their meeting will be infinitely more sad
to them. Now, this the Lord doth several ways:—

[1.] He will sometimes utterly remove the gospel from them;
— turn the stream of the waters of the sanctuary, that they shall come to
them no more. So he threatened the church at Ephesus of old, Rev. ii. 5, “Remember therefore from
whence thou art fallen,” etc., “or else I will come unto thee quickly, and
will remove thy candlestick out of his place.” They shall have the light
of the word no more; it shall be removed and taken from them. Ah! how
ninny places lie under this woeful judgment of God at this day, — this
sentence of being given up to salt for ever! Places there are in the world
that have enjoyed the word at God’s appointed season, or, at least, the
tender of it, and opportunity to enjoy it; but continuing unprofitable
under it, what is now their state, and condition? God hath left them to
that sore judgment, that they themselves should be made instrumental to
cast out the word from amongst them; like the foolish woman, pulling down
the house with their own hands: and so [they] have got darkness for a
vision, and they that would not rejoice in the truth, and in the light, 187do now, through the tremendous judgment of God, triumph in
darkness, and in a thing of nought.

It is true, the gospel may be sometimes taken for a season
from a people for their trial and exercise, and not penalty; — it may be
driven from them, and not absolutely sinned away. Now, as the Lord hath
many glorious ends in such a dispensation, so it may easily be known
whether people have lost the gospel only for a season, in a way of trial;
or penalty, as a beginning of their being given up to salt and barrenness.
As, —

1st. They that are deprived for a season of gospel
enjoyments for their trial and exercise, are sensible of the displeasure of
God in that dispensation, and greatly humble themselves under his hand on
that account. They say, as the church in Mic. vii.
9, “I will bear the indignation of the Lord, because I have sinned against
him, until he plead my cause, and execute judgment for me.” They look on
this as the greatest calamity and trial that can befall them; whereas they
that lose it penalty, are either very little concerned about it, or do
greatly rejoice at it. The word tormented them, and they are glad they are
freed from it. Rev. xi.
10, “And they that dwell upon the earth shall rejoice over them,
and make merry, and shall send gifts one to another; because these two
prophets tormented them that dwelt on the earth.” Some never rejoice more
than when they are got quit of the gospel; and others are like Gallio. Now, when such as these have
the word taken from them, and are no way sensible of the displeasure of the
Lord in it, nor do humble themselves before him on that account, it is a
certain evidence that God is giving them up unto a state of salt; that is,
barrenness and eternal ruin.

2dly. They that are deprived of it for a season in
a way of trial have no rest, but are earnest with the Lord for the return
of it. 1 Sam. vii. 2, The ark was gone; and
though they had peace and plenty, and all things else in abundance, yet all
will not satisfy them; the ark is absent, that pledge of God’s presence,
and they lamented after him. So is it with these; — let them have peace,
or liberty, or prosperity, all is one; if they have not the ark, — if they
have not the gospel and ordinances of God, — they can take no rest, but are
still lamenting after the Lord, still longing after the enjoyment of his
word. David doth excellently express this frame of heart, Ps. lxiii. 1, 2, “O God, thou art my
God; early will I seek thee: my soul thirsteth for thee, my flesh longeth
for thee in a dry and thirsty land, where no water is; to see thy power and
thy glory, so as I have seen thee in the sanctuary.” He was driven from
the ordinances of God; the waters of the sanctuary came not to him. But
now they from whom the word is taken penally are no way troubled about it,
nor do long after it; they rejoice in what they have in the room of it, —
are exceedingly 188well pleased without it. Let them have an
increase of corn, and wine, and oil, — let them have their lusts and their
sports, their formalities and follies, — they care not whether ever they
hear of the word of the gospel any more. Such men are certainly entering
into a condition of salt, of barrenness and ruin.

3dly. They who are deprived of the word for a
season for their trial, have a high estimation and value of their mercy and
privilege who enjoy it. They do not think the proud happy, nor envy at
prosperous wickedness, nor bow in their hearts before the Hamans of the
earth. But those they think blessed who enjoy the word, and the presence
of God therein. This our Saviour teaches them to esteem, Luke xi. 28, “But he said, Yea,
rather, blessed are they that hear the word of God, and keep it.” David
doth excellently set out this frame of heart, Ps. lxxxiv.
4, “Blessed are they that dwell in thy house; they will be still
praising thee. Selah.” “I am,” saith he, “a poor outcast, deprived of thy
word and ordinances. O the blessed condition of those who enjoy them! Let
them be what they will as to their outward state, they are in a blessed
condition if they may dwell in thy house, — enjoy the privileges of the
spiritual house of God and his worship, in the gospel.” This is the frame
of such persons, — those only they esteem blessed who are refreshed with
the waters of the sanctuary; but none are more despised by those from whom
the gospel is judicially removed. It is the great, the mighty, the rich,
the sensual, that they esteem blessed; for those others they esteem as the
dirt or the mire.

Now, hence it is that God may at the same time remove his
gospel from a place, judicially from some, and by a way of trial from
others, whereby these contrary effects are produced:— Some are humbled
under the hand of the Lord, mourn after his presence, and account them
blessed who enjoy his ordinances; — others triumph and rejoice in their
condition, look upon it as good and blessed; at least, are little concerned
in the dispensation that God is dealing with them in. And as the Lord doth
good to the former by this exercise, preparing them also for farther
mercies, in a greater estimation of his word, and profiting under it when
enjoyed; so to the other, this is the entrance of their ruin; — they are
cast out of the care of God, and you never see such a people afterward
obtain mercy.

[2.] God doth this sometimes though he causeth the word to
be continued unto them, — by restraining the efficacy of it, that it shall
not profit them. Men may have lived out their season that God hath given
them to be healed in, and yet God have work to do in that place where they
live; so that the word must be preached. Some poor souls amongst them are
to be quickened or healed, called or edified; so that he will not turn away
the course of these holy waters, 189but continue the dispensation
of the gospel. But as for those who have withstood their season of
healing, and are cast out of the care of God, God will so order things that
the word shall have no power upon them. Now, though the righteous judgment
of God have a hand in this matter, yet, by his permission, their own lusts
are the immediate cause of it; as, —

1st. They shall have some prejudices against them
by whom the gospel is dispensed in the power and purity of it, which shall
keep them from attending unto or profiting by their message. So in the
days of Ahab there were four hundred preachers that he had a mind to hear;
but they were all false prophets, teachers of lies, idolatrous, and
superstitious: only, there were two prophets of the Lord, Elijah the
Tishbite, and Micaiah the son of Imlah; and both these he looked upon as
his enemies, as persons not well affected unto him; so that he would
believe nothing of what they preached. So of Elijah, 1
Kings xxi. 20; and of Micaiah, chap. xxii.
8. So shall it befall many whom God will leave to salt, because
the season of their healing hath been withstood; — though the word be
preached, they shall have prejudices against the dispensers of it, so that
they shall not profit by them. And little do they think that these
prejudices and hard thoughts are chains and fetters to keep them in unto
the judgment of the great day. And of this nature also are other
prejudices that men have.

2dly. He will suffer them to be unconquerably
hardened in the love of some sin or lust, which shall keep off the power of
the word from their hearts. So the ground here that is not healed is said
to be “miry and marshy;” — such as hath a mixture of filth incorporated
with it sufficient to repel all the virtue of the healing waters of the
sanctuary. Thus we see men every day so furiously set upon their lusts,
sports, and sensuality, that they hate, and are filled with madness and
rage against, all that would persuade them to sobriety: much more doth the
word of the gospel torment them, so that they rise with fury against it;
and this keeps them from profiting by it. “They are given to salt.”

3dly. God withdraws the efficacy of his Spirit in
the dispensation of the word, that it shall not have that strength and
power on them as upon others. God sends his word towards his own in a way
of covenant; and then it is always accompanied with his Spirit, Isa. lix. 21. And where God dealeth
with men in covenant mercy, these go together. But now when he casts men
out of his care, though the word may be preached to their ear, because of
some others whom he yet cares for, yet he hath said concerning them, that
his Spirit shall strive with them no more. And thence it is that the word
makes no impression on them, — its healing virtue is as to, them
withheld.

190And this is the first thing the Lord doth to
such poor creatures as he leaves to salt, to barrenness, and ruin, for
despising the season and means of their healing, — he casts them out of his
care, as to the dispensation of the word.